Quilt Piecing Tips

Let’s confess! How many of you stitch over pins? I stitch!! The only exception is when I stitch multiple layers of thick fabrics- in bags.
But I would advice anyone to avoid stitching over pins. A machine needle hitting a pin could break and hit your eye. Or it could damage your sewing machine. It happened to me once and the machine needed a repair.

If you choose to stitch over pins, here are a few safety tips:

use fine (thin) pins

do not stitch with very short stitches

pin perpendicular to the edges

stitch slowly

wear glasses

Chain piecing
This is a time saver technique that allows you to sew a number of different units (two pieces of fabric) in one continuous loop.

Start chain piecing by stitching the first pair of fabric pieces, then without removing them from the sewing machine and without cutting the thread, insert the next unit to be stitched. You don’t even need to lift the presser foot. Continue
stitching from one unit to the next. Then clip the threads connecting the units and move on to the next step in your quilt pattern.

Are the pins necessary all the time?
A beginner quilter will use pins more often than an experimented quilter.
I think I was a beginner quilter for more than 7 years! I used pins for everything, even when I had to piece 2” squares together. Then I saw Eleanor Burns in a video piecing without pins and that was quite a discovery (yes, that disadvantage of no quilting friend to teach you something so simple but important!!).

I still use pins when I need to match points, in blocks. And I always use pins when I piece rows of a quilt together-I piece faster and with more accuracy.So if you use pins and carefully stitch over them, remove the pins in bulk- another time saver tip! Stacking the pieces this way allows you to remove many pins at once.

How to piece different shapes together
Sewing square with square or triangle with triangle is easy.
But how about piecing different shapes (like triangle with rectangle or square; the edges don’t have the same size).
Here is a tip.
Draw those shapes on a piece of cardboard(paper is good too). Mark the 1/4 inch seam allowance (or whatever seam allowance you use) then cut out templates. Match the pieces and keep them together with pins.

Keep them to hand and use them as reference- eyeball that little triangle when you piece your fabric.
You can use them for pieces of any size, if you use the same seam allowance.

How about piecing diamonds? This helps a lot!

Remember: keep the templates, you can use them again and again regardless of the size of the pieces you have to piece.I hope these quilt piecing tips are helpful for some of you.
Enjoy piecing,
GetaPS. Thank you all who voted for

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Comments

Thanks so much for the tips, Geta. I have always had difficulty piecing triangles with squares. Now I will follow your suggestion with the paper pieces and I am sure my "piecing" life will be much happier. Sharon